Dustjacket synopsis:
"From the moment he allows his young cousin and bride to spend the night in his room,
Father Maitland causes raised eyebrows and dark mutterings amongst the brothers at St Peter's.

"Time and again his efforts to do the right thing for his fellow men lead him into conflict
with his superiors and the immutable laws of the church - a conflict which ultimately
threatens to destroy him both as a priest and as a man..."

Quotes:
"Very funny indeed: the rather awful comedy inherent in a priest's life, especially a
post-conciliar priest's life." - Graham Greene
"His book is infused with a pawky clerical awareness that human life, though sometimes
capable of holiness, is often merely funny." - Time
"Keneally's novel about a doubting priest is rich in unexpected visions and sudden
epiphanies. He writes like an angel." - New York Times Book Review

First Paragraph:

On Saturday evening, Maitland had to say Mass on a headland for a guild of graduates. The
occasion had been arranged in the heat of early March, but on the afternoon itself dusk was
all cold light and fierce winds. The altar cloths had to be tacked down, a truck had to be
driven to the weather side of the altar lest the chalice and chalice veils blow away. The
Mass proceeded under a sky dark as plums. The sea raced in obliquely, breaking on his left,
and wraiths of spray infested the hill. He enjoyed the occasion and was happy when turning
to speak to these people who half-lay to hear him. They reclined on rugs and ground-sheets
as if they might well be preparing to drink coffee from a thermos or make love. This somehow
gave him the sense that what he performed had an affinity to the earth and the elements and
the blood. So that, for the first time since coming home at Christmas, he did not feel
an alien.

From the Penguin paperback edition, 1984.

Notes:
This novel won the 1968
Miles Franklin Award.
The only other mention I can find of the novel on the Web is its listing on what's titled the
Guilt List of Books You Should
Read which is described as: "This is a list that's
produced by an English professor at San Jose State University in California. It is a list of
books that one is supposed to have read before receiving his/her BA in English degree. For
many English majors, they don't even have l/lOth of the books listed under their belts before
graduation hence the 'guilt' aspect of it.."